felipeee1260 felipeee1260
  • 07-02-2021
  • Mathematics
contestada

Suppose () = 46%; ( and ) = 10%; and ( or ) = 62% Find (Not ). Can this really be a probability? If not, explain why not.

Respuesta :

MrRoyal
MrRoyal MrRoyal
  • 09-02-2021

Answer:

[tex]P(E) = 26 \%[/tex]

Step-by-step explanation:

Given

[tex]P(F) = 46\%[/tex]

[tex]P(E\ and\ F) = 10\%[/tex]

[tex]P(E\ or\ F) = 62\%[/tex]

Required

Find P(E)

In probability:

[tex]P(E\ and\ F) = P(E) + P(F) - p(E\ or\ F)[/tex]

Substitute the right values

[tex]10\% = P(E) + 46\% - 62\%[/tex]

[tex]10\% = P(E) -16 \%[/tex]

Collect Like Terms

[tex]P(E) = 10\% +16 \%[/tex]

[tex]P(E) = 26 \%[/tex]

It is a probability because all probabilities are within the range 0 to 100%

Answer Link

Otras preguntas

Sometimes we’d brave Momma’s consternation and push all the living room furniture aside so we could try out some moves.
What is 987% as decimal form
What line is perpendicular to 3y=5x-1
How did the Scientific Revolution lead to the Industrial Revolution? Using the following words in your answer, Reason, Natural law, Scientific Method, Problems
The pedigree traces red-green color blindness. Which family members have red-green color blindness? Sam, Tim, Bella, and Joshua Lisa and Monica Ben, Jenny, Mike
scandium47 has a half-life of 35s. suppose you have a 45g sample of scadium 47 how much of the sample remains unchanged after 140 seconds
please answer quickly
Describe three tactics that Alexander the Great used to maintain control over his growing empire.
Why do living organisms release energy gradually?
what is 9/16 x 12/13 and 7/10 x 5/28